Karyological relationships and biodiversity of the pine voles of Azerbaijan : differentiation of species from the Greater and Lesser Caucasus Mountains
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Karyological relationships and biodiversity of the pine voles of Azerbaijan : differentiation of species from the Greater and Lesser Caucasus Mountains
- Publication date
- 2010
- Publisher
- Lubbock, TX : Museum of Texas Tech University
- Collection
- biodiversity
- Contributor
- Museum of Texas Tech University
- Language
- English
- Rights-holder
- Museum of Texas Tech University
- Volume
- no.291 (2010)
14 p. : 28 cm
The authors conducted a karyological investigation of the pine voles Microtus (Terricola) and Microtus (Hyrcanicola) inhabiting Azerbaijan. Differentially and non-differentially stained karyotypes of three species (M. (H.) schelkovnikovi, M. (T.) majori, and M. (T.) daghestanicus) revealed a constant diploid number (2n = 54) and variation in fundamental number (FN = 58-62). Differential staining revealed pericentric inversions accounted for variation in FN and also revealed variation in NOR position and number as well as in C-band heterochromatin amount and distribution. Two subspecies of M. majori from the Greater and Lesser Caucuses, respectively, differed in heterochromatin and NOR distribution and possibly represent distinct species. The non-differentially stained karyotype of a fourth species, M. nasarovi (2n = 38, FN = 58) from the Lesser Caucuses, was found to be highly distinct from the previously considered conspecific M. daghestanicus (2n = 54, FN = 58) from the Greater Caucuses. We conclude that there are at least four species, and possibly five, of pine voles in Azerbaijan and further systematic studies should be conducted to determine the taxonomic status of the recognized subspecies of M. majori. The Greater and Lesser Caucasus Mountains appear to have served as refugia providing for differentiation among species pairs of pine voles
Caption title
"21 April 2010."
"Texas Tech University, Natural Science Research Laboratory."
Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-13)
The authors conducted a karyological investigation of the pine voles Microtus (Terricola) and Microtus (Hyrcanicola) inhabiting Azerbaijan. Differentially and non-differentially stained karyotypes of three species (M. (H.) schelkovnikovi, M. (T.) majori, and M. (T.) daghestanicus) revealed a constant diploid number (2n = 54) and variation in fundamental number (FN = 58-62). Differential staining revealed pericentric inversions accounted for variation in FN and also revealed variation in NOR position and number as well as in C-band heterochromatin amount and distribution. Two subspecies of M. majori from the Greater and Lesser Caucuses, respectively, differed in heterochromatin and NOR distribution and possibly represent distinct species. The non-differentially stained karyotype of a fourth species, M. nasarovi (2n = 38, FN = 58) from the Lesser Caucuses, was found to be highly distinct from the previously considered conspecific M. daghestanicus (2n = 54, FN = 58) from the Greater Caucuses. We conclude that there are at least four species, and possibly five, of pine voles in Azerbaijan and further systematic studies should be conducted to determine the taxonomic status of the recognized subspecies of M. majori. The Greater and Lesser Caucasus Mountains appear to have served as refugia providing for differentiation among species pairs of pine voles
Caption title
"21 April 2010."
"Texas Tech University, Natural Science Research Laboratory."
Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-13)
- Abstract
- The authors conducted a karyological investigation of the pine voles Microtus (Terricola) and Microtus (Hyrcanicola) inhabiting Azerbaijan. Differentially and non-differentially stained karyotypes of three species (M. (H.) schelkovnikovi, M. (T.) majori, and M. (T.) daghestanicus) revealed a constant diploid number (2n = 54) and variation in fundamental number (FN = 58-62). Differential staining revealed pericentric inversions accounted for variation in FN and also revealed variation in NOR position and number as well as in C-band heterochromatin amount and distribution. Two subspecies of M. majori from the Greater and Lesser Caucuses, respectively, differed in heterochromatin and NOR distribution and possibly represent distinct species. The non-differentially stained karyotype of a fourth species, M. nasarovi (2n = 38, FN = 58) from the Lesser Caucuses, was found to be highly distinct from the previously considered conspecific M. daghestanicus (2n = 54, FN = 58) from the Greater Caucuses. We conclude that there are at least four species, and possibly five, of pine voles in Azerbaijan and further systematic studies should be conducted to determine the taxonomic status of the recognized subspecies of M. majori. The Greater and Lesser Caucasus Mountains appear to have served as refugia providing for differentiation among species pairs of pine voles.
- Addeddate
- 2019-02-16 00:49:56
- Associated-names
- Bickham, John W. (John Wayne), 1949-; Texas Tech University. Museum; Texas Tech University. Natural Science Research Laboratory
- Call number
- TT-OP-291-2010
- Call-number
- TT-OP-291-2010
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Genre
- bibliography
- Identifier
- karyologicalrel291kuli
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t5kb0pr1h
- Identifier-bib
- TT-OP-291-2010
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)
- Pages
- 16
- Possible copyright status
- In copyright. Digitized with the permission of the rights holder.
- Ppi
- 449
- Year
- 2010
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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